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Monday, February 27, 2012

Honda CR-V Consumer's Review

Honda CR-V
Generational heresy alert: I’ve continuously hated Ferris Bueller’s break day.

Maybe I’m a killjoy, however i assumed the titular character was a spoiled brat who required to find out that actions have consequences. Plus, even a reproduction of a Ferrari 250 GT California doesn’t should find yourself in a very ravine.

It was with nice satisfaction, then, that I watched Honda’s Super Bowl business. A grown-up Matthew Broderick played hooky and sleepwalked through some Ferris-style hijinks. His automotive of choice? A Honda CR-V. state accepting responsibility. raise any CR-V owner why they determined to place one in their driveway and therefore the answer can invariably embrace the phrase, “after our youngest was born,” or “good within the snow.” You can’t outrun Mr. Rooney forever.
Ask any CR-V owner why they determined to place one in their driveway and therefore the answer can invariably embrace the phrase, ‘after our youngest was born,’ or ‘good within the snow.’

Monday, February 20, 2012

Mazda 5 2012 Consumer's Review

If you decision yourself an auto enthusiast, you’ve ought to have some love for Mazda. I don’t care if you are taking factory delivery of a replacement M3 each four years or have a Mustang brand tattooed on your bicep — when it involves championing technology that no-one else can, the fifth-largest Japanese automaker can’t be beat.

While the MX-5, RX-7 and first-generation Cosmo earned the corporate some street (and track) cred, there’s a certain freak flag flying over Mazda headquarters. for nearly fifty years, it churned out light-weight, fuel-thirsty Wankel engines till stopping development in 2011. The rear-wheel-drive 929 sedan had a solar-powered sunroof vent before the Prius was a twinkle of code on a screen. and therefore the posh Millenia S featured the world’s initial production Miller cycle engine. Even the reskinned Ford Probe that was the MX-6 got four-wheel steering. Focus teams in Mazda’s hometown of Hiroshima should contains highly imaginative contrarians, the kind of individuals who drink French beer and Canadian wine.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Chevrolet Sonic Consumer's Review

Chevrolet Sonic
Millennials, Generation Y, Echo Boomers — there are 40 million of us in the workforce now, and we’ve got money to spend. On our friends, our families, and our first car purchases.

Chevrolet is keenly aware of this burgeoning automotive audience, and has zeroed in on the youth of today with its latest offering, the Chevy Sonic. The latest econo-compact from Chevrolet replaces the company’s old Aveo line, and follows hot on the heels of the über-successful, top-selling Cruze. The Chevy Sonic slots in with other sub-$20K subcompacts like the Ford Fiesta, Honda Fit and Hyundai Accent, but it’s got the price point, performance and spunk necessary to stand out in this perennially crowded category.

The Sonic’s exterior is sporty, reminiscent of the Cruze but more fun, with angled contouring along the sides and those circular headlamps that are so in style. It’s available as a four-door sedan or a 5-door hatchback, and I drove both configurations in my test. The interior of both models is comfortable and surprisingly spacious. Details like a leather steering wheel and contrast stitching on the soft, Neoprene-like “sport cloth” seats (which you can swap out for “leatherette”) make the Sonic feel more high-brow than its price tag would suggest.

  

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Mercedes-Benz 2012 ML63 AMG Consumer's review

Mercedes-Benz 2012 ML63 AMG

Like bacon-laced ice cream or deep-fried turducken, the ultra high performance SUV is a curious amalgam of ingredients governed by an inscrutable raison d’être. How does this mutant automotive strain survive the vagaries of the market, and what draws drivers to this genre like a spacecraft to a black hole?

Rather than ponder the why, let’s consider the how.

The ass-kicking SUV was unofficially inaugurated in the automotive heyday of the mid-’80s, when the Lamborghini LM002 ignited passion among the oil sheikh set with its carbureted V12 and angularly ginormous bodywork. The Italian curiosity only sold 328 examples, but paved the way (ahem!) for the niche-within-a-niche: the supercar trapped in the sport ute’s body.

Contemporary examples include the BMW X5M ($87,250) and Porsche Cayenne Turbo ($107,100), and though these evolved specimens may not look as cartoonishly delicious or devilishly despicable as the “Rambo Lambo,” they stand as wonderfully improbable achievements within a richly regulated, petroleum-endangered zeitgeist that harbors fear and loathing for the insensible.
This is not a supercar or sport coupe, but rather a four-wheeled frivolity cloaked under the guise of usable space and cargo hauling utility.

Since I’ve recently criss-crossed the rambling backroads of central California in Mercedes-Benz’s newest such offering — the $95,865 ML63 AMG — allow me to explicate, or at least try to make sense of this pre-apocalyptic, muscle-engined madness. For starters, let’s play devil’s advocate and recall that a nice, base model ML350 can be had for nearly half the dough. It will transport you from A to B in commendable efficacy and decent luxury, even if Mercedes-Benz deems it reasonable to make real leather an option. Seriously.

But the standard ML is incapable of inducing lung-emptying bliss on every onramp, or responding to steering input with anything remotely resembling obedience. The off-the-rack donor car, though vastly improved over its predecessor in numerous ways including a lighter, stronger chassis, a quieter ride, and the lowest aerodynamic drag coefficient of any sport ute, is an achievement in satisfying the fat middle of the bell curve of buyers, not the edgy extreme of enthusiasts. So while Mercedes-Benz engineers clearly worked overtime to enhance the function-oriented ML, it took the mad scientists at AMG to get its freak on.

Still skeptical? Once the ball of your right foot reaches for the wool carpet beneath, you just might be charged with instant comprehension of the indelible charms of this rolling contradiction, as though the knowledge transferred directly from the accelerator pedal to your hippocampus. This is not a supercar or sport coupe, but rather a four-wheeled frivolity cloaked under the guise of usable space and cargo hauling utility. Call it cognitive dissonance or just plain silly, but the way this weighty vehicle presses you against its perforated leather is unexpected at the very least, and delightfully counterintuitive, at best.

The power source is a twin-turbocharged, 5.5-liter V8 that replaces the naturally aspirated 6.2-liter lump. In a textbook case of less-is-more, the smaller mill churns more power — 518 horsepower and 516 pound-feet of torque — while also yielding 28 percent better fuel economy, though it’s still only expected to average 16 mpg, combined.

Add the $6,050 AMG Development Package, and output is boosted to 550 horsepower and 560 pound-feet, and top speed is raised to 174 mph — proof there’s always a little more to squeeze from these already hard-working engines. Expect to reach 60 mph in 4.7 seconds, or 4.6 with the optional engine boost. Those rates of acceleration are accompanied by a deep, heartwarming exhaust note that sounds like the feeling of whiskey going down your gullet, punctuated by snorty “braps” as the 7-speed transmission changes gears.
Attack a winding highway, and this Merc becomes a merciless accomplice, squirting, punching, and dancing its way through the twists until you or your companion reaches for the barf bag.

Apart from badges and model-specific trim, there’s little within the ML63′s heavily upholstered leather interior to suggest what lurks beneath the gently raked bonnet. But there is more texture and detail to behold than the non-AMG iteration, thanks to the standard Designo package which brings supple cowhide to the dashboard, armrests, and door trim, and offers more aggressively bolstered seats for your cornering enjoyment.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Kia Rio SX 5-door Consumer's Review

Kia Rio SX 5-door
As the gazelle belongs to the savannah, the Kia Rio five-door belongs to the stop-and-go traffic of town streets.

It’s cheap, snug and fuel-efficient, attributes that have created previous versions of Kia’s premier commuter-mobile the darling of urban dwellers in their mid-20s to late-30s.

Completely redesigned and jam-choked with new gadgetry, the 2012 Kia Rio SX could be a solid contender among competing subcompacts, like the Ford Fiesta or the Chevrolet Sonic. very similar to Hyundai, the opposite massive Korean manufacturer with a foot within the U.S. market, Kia’s return an extended approach since the times when it solely offered entry-level shoeboxes with short life expectations.

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Hyundai Sonata Black Dashboard 2017 in San Diego

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